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August 20, 1999
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By Mark Hachman
August 19, 1999
Electronic Buyers' News
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Conceding to price over performance at the low-end of the PC market, Intel Corp. here has pulled out of the discrete desktop graphics chip business.
While Intel is the highest-profile company to date to make this decision, it may not be alone. Another low-end player, Trident Microsystems Inc., is leaning in this direction. And with Nvidia Corp.'s decision to partner with Acer Laboratories Inc., virtually every graphics chip company is now looking to direct some portion of new product development to integrating graphics and core logic (see
next story, below).
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August 19, 1999
Semiconductor Business News
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Nvidia Corp. here said it is teaming up with Taiwan's Acer Laboratories Inc. to integrated its three-dimensional graphics processor function with Acer's core logic for
persona computers to address mass-market PCs.
The combination of Nvidia's 3-D graphics technology with Acer's core logic "will provide end users with the best possible graphics at the lowest possible cost," declared Jen-Hsun Huang, president and CEO of Nvidia. Taipei-based Acer Laboratories has been focused on serving low-cost PCs, and Nvidia hopes those connections will help move more of its 3-D graphics processors cores into the high-volume computing markets.
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By Mark Hachman
August 19, 1999
Electronic Buyers' News
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A Canadian benchmarking operation claims Advanced Micro Devices Inc. modified tests to give its Athlon microprocessor an unfair advantage over Intel Corp.'s Pentium III.
FutureMark Software Corp. Ltd. said AMD is violating the trademark of the Toronto company's 3DMark 99 MAX test suite and terms of a related licensing agreement. While FutureMark has not taken any legal action against AMD, the company said AMD's actions were "inappropriate."
According to FutureMark, AMD modified the 3D Mark 99 MAX test by optimizing the DLL test code for its recently released
Athlon. AMD's own test results demonstrated that, in one of the two 3Dmark tests, the 600-MHz Athlon outperformed the 600-MHz Pentium III by more than 30%. Of the 13 test results accompanying AMD's Athlon performance assertions, the 3DMark figures were among the highest in favor of the chip.
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By Stephen Shankland
August 19, 1999
C/Net
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Although Intel steadfastly maintains that its Merced chip will be more than just a test bed, Hewlett-Packard, co-designer of the chip, recommends that some customers bypass it and wait for the next one.
The release date and performance of Merced has prompted many observers to say that the chip, the first "IA-64" processor, would be merely a test drive for the advanced architecture. HP's point of view, decribed at a conference here, is the first time that an insider and main proponent of the chip has recommending skipping it.
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By John G. Spooner
August 19, 1999
ZDNet News
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Intel Corp. is planning next year to significantly improve the performance of low-cost desktop PCs by moving its
Celeron chip to a new processor core.
The Santa Clara, Calif., chip maker will move Celeron from the Pentium II processor core to the Pentium III
core based on its Coppermine technology, sources said. Coppermine is the code-name for Pentium III
chips manufactured using Intel's 0.18 micron manufacturing process. The first chips to use
Coppermine, Pentium IIIs of 600MHz and greater, due in late October, sources said.
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The Register Files
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By Mike Magee
August 19, 1999
The Register
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The Register has learnt today of a piece of Intel software, run from the DOS command line, which can make chips run at twice the speed.
The software, called NEWSPEED.EXE will push processors up to the limit.
The software is designed for OEMs and Intel staff themselves, one of whom said he had used it on a 450MHz processor, overclocking it to 550MHz for a year, without anything falling over.
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By Mike Magee
August 19, 1999
The Register
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Chip gargantua Intel today would neither confirm or deny it had exited the discrete graphics business -- one which cost it over $430 million to buy.
An Intel representative said today: "As far as I am aware, we are still in this business, producing the i752 chip."
A month ago, it slit the throat of its i754 project, as reported here.
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By Mike Magee
August 19, 1999
The Register
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Taiwanese wire Commercial News is reporting today that Intel will ration BX/ZX chipsets supplied to motherboard manufacturers by as much as 50 per cent come September. And, as reported here earlier, it is attempting to shift the mobo makers to the 810 chipset, without much success.
But, says the wire, local manufacturers are already switching to chipsets from Via and SiS instead, causing a shortage of those parts and price increases.
All the major mobo makers have received notice of shortages, including FIC, Asustek and
MicroStar.
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By Mike Magee
August 19, 1999
The Register
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The fight between the Old Guard and the Young Turks at HP over Merced still seems to be on with a vengeance.
Earlier this year, we reported that the company was advising customers to go direct to McKinley IA-64 architecture, jumping over Merced. (Story: HP confirms Merced retreat)
Not long after that, HP said Merced was a clear part of its strategy (Story: Intel will do Merced)
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Today's
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By Michael Kanellos
August 19, 1999
C/Net
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The world's largest and most profitable chipmaker can't seem to cut it in the graphics world.
Intel is getting out of the business of making discrete graphics chips for personal computers, according to a company spokesman, a market it entered less than 18 months ago to fanfare and dismal sales. The company will continue to produce "integrated" chipsets, which combine a standard PC chipset with a graphics processor, but these products will likely remain targeted at computers selling for $1,000 and less.
The retreat is the result of poor sales and mediocre products, critics say, and is merely the latest in a series of missteps by Intel in this market.
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By Mark Hachman
August 19, 1999
Electronic Buyers' News
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Nvidia Corp.'s progress in the graphics market was underscored today by a whopping 543% jump in second-quarter revenue, a healthy profit, and a product
development deal with chipset maker Acer Laboratories Inc.
Nvidia, Santa Clara, Calif., recorded revenue of $78 million for the second quarter of fiscal 2000 ended Aug. 1, 1999, matched by a similarly robust profit of $6.7 million, or 19 cents per share. Revenue climbed 543% from $12.1 million in the same period a year ago, during which Nvidia reported a net loss of $9.7 million.
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August 19, 1999
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By Mark Hachman
August 18, 1999
Electronic Buyers' News
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A Canadian benchmarking operation here claims that Advanced Micro Devices Inc. modified its own tests to give its Athlon microprocessor an unfair advantage over Intel Corp.'s Pentium III.
FutureMark Software Corp. Ltd. alleges that AMD is now in violation of the trademark surrounding its 3DMark 99 MAX test suite and related licensing agreement. While FutureMark has not taken legal action against AMD, the company said AMD's actions were "inappropriate."
According to FutureMark, AMD modified FutureMark's 3DMark 99 MAX test by optimizing the DLL test code for its recently released Athlon chip. AMD's own test results demonstrated that the 600-MHz Athlon outperformed the 600-MHz Pentium III by over 30% in one of the two 3DMark tests. Of the 13 test results accompanying the Athlon press release, the 3DMark figures were among the highest in favor of the Athlon chip.
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By Stephen Shankland
August 18, 1999
C/Net
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Although Intel steadfastly maintains that its Merced chip will be more than just a test bed, Hewlett-Packard, co-designer of the chip, recommends that customers bypass it and wait for the next one.
The release date and performance of Merced has prompted many observers to say that the chip, the first "IA-64" processor, would be merely a test drive for the advanced architecture. HP's decision, announced at a conference here, is the first time that an insider and main proponent of the chip has recommending skipping it.
About a year ago, HP was showing a road map that had its server computers adopting Merced in 2000.
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By Michael Kanellos
August 18, 1999
C/Net
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A new processor architecture presented today by Sun could enhance the way video and audio are delivered to the home, but, unfortunately for the company, not many people may need it.
The MAJC chip architecture, outlined by Sun Microsystems at the Hot Chips conference, will be the cornerstone of the company's ambition to build a "media" processor--an embedded chip fine-tuned for video, audio, computer graphics, and other multimedia. Media processors will be used in television set-top boxes, digital TVs, and game consoles.
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Associated Press
August 18, 1999
SiliconValley.com
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Intel Corp. will require Internet sites that carry its advertising -- including its popular ``Intel Inside'' campaign -- to warn consumers what personal details are collected about them online, the company said Wednesday.
The decision by the world's largest maker of computer processors is the latest move to convince the federal government that the high-tech industry can regulate itself and that new privacy laws are not needed to protect consumers on the Internet.
Intel, which spent $1.3 billion on all advertising last year, is among the largest buyers of ads on the Internet, especially with its prominent campaign featuring the familiar ``Intel Inside'' swirl logo.
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By Mitch Wagner
August 18, 1999
InformationWeek
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As a new generation of eight-way Intel-based servers is released in the coming weeks, their ability to run key enterprise applications will be put to the test.
The first eight-way server based on Intel's Profusion chip set is due out next week from Compaq Computer, and several others are expected from Dell, IBM, and Hewlett-Packard, among others.
Intel next week will announce immediate availability of the Profusion chip set, which offers a standardized means of connecting up to eight processors in a single system. The previous limit from Intel was four processors, although individual vendors have implemented proprietary architectures that scale up to 64 processors. IT managers have not bought into those systems in a big way mainly because they were proprietary.
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The Register Files
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By Mike Magee
August 18, 1999
The Register
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Sometimes, here at The Register, we wonder whether it's just us reeling at the price of microprocessors.
If you buy a stack of Pentium III/Xeons, for example, they'll typically cost you 10 times the price of a stack of bog standard Pentium IIIs.
The answer, it appears, is validation. Intel representatives are at pain to assure us that these particular members of the PIII family, because they are designed for servers, are well worth the price.
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By Mike Magee
August 18, 1999
The Register
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A source claimed Intel is readying a Coppermine Celeron with as much as 256K of on-die cache, screaming Cindy (SIMD) instructions, and a 100MHz front side bus using Socket 370.
That would make it equivalent to current Pentium III technology, in the same way that the Celeron is really a cut Pentium II.
No release date was given for the product but Intel is now claiming no 100MHz FSB Celeron will arrive until the crack of dawn of the year 2000, Ma Shipton willing.
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By Mike Magee
August 18, 1999
The Register
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The application of Lernout & Huspie translation software to a Japanese Web site has provided intriguing insights into Intel's future plans.
Two days back, we reported the existence of the roadmap, with dates for up-and-coming Intel technology including Coppermine, Willamette, Timna and Foster.
According to the translated document, Intel will use a chipset called Tehama for the Willamette, which will inherit some of the characteristics of a chipset codenamed Camino II.
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By Mike Magee
August 18, 1999
The Register
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Dr Tom Pabst, who founded Tom's Hardware page, is alleging that Intel has been muscling Taiwanese mobo manufacturers.
Pabst, who has just posted a first look at AMD Athlon motherboards, said there was a "very strong rumour" that Intel is throwing its whole weight behind the threats.
That, he says, goes some way towards explaining that only a handful of companies supported the Athlon at its launch in Taipei last week.
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August 18, 1999
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By Dan Briody
August 17, 1999
InfoWorld Electric
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Compaq got a jump on the competition Tuesday as the struggling company announced its eight-way servers one week before the official Intel launch on Aug. 23. And according to company officials, the systems are strategic to the PC giant's NonStop E-business marketing tagline.
At a press conference held here Tuesday morning, the senior vice president of Compaq's Enterprise Solutions and Services Group, Enrico Pesatori, spoke of Compaq's intent to attack the emerging Internet service provider and application service provider market.
"The growth of e-business is at the beginning, and it is being driven by the ISP and ASP market," Pesatori said. "Compaq intends to take a leadership stance, and these [eight-way] servers are at the center of our e-business strategy."
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By Michael Lattig
August 17, 1999
InfoWorld Electric
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The cold and fog of Santa Cruz in August couldn't dampen the spirits of Unix enthusiasts as this year's SCO Forum kicked off with druid prognosticator Sumad Artsmen, the alter-ego of SCO evangelist Tony Baines, declaring the "new millennium is now" for Unix.
Among the predictions offered by "Artsmen" were the inability of Windows NT to destroy Unix, Intel's upcoming Merced chip as the greatest volume opportunity Unix has ever seen, and the erosion of proprietary Unix strongholds due to the emergence of ever-more powerful Intel servers.
"I see a renewed sense of purpose in the Unix community," Baines said.
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The Register Files
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August 17, 1999
The Register
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Pete Sherriff has been slaving in his fab lab to produce a new RegMark™ to account for the existence of Athlon AMD processors and has come up with a formula he describes as the RegMark™ Lite®.
According to Sherriff, he is unable to find a multimedia mark for the Athlon K7, so he has invented a way to use the Lite figure to compare all four processors on just two benchmarks.
Said Sherriff: "This way the PIII/500 scores higher than the Athlon/600 which beats the
PIII/600, but the Celeron still walks away with it."
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By Mike Magee
August 17, 1999
The Register
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Hewlett Packard confirmed today it will support HP/UX, 64-bit Windows NT and Linux on Merced.
It also said that it will support MPE/iX on future IA-64 systems and confirmed it would incorporate
Merced into its top end server lines by the middle of next year.
Hugh Jenkins, product marketing manager for HP's enterprise division, said: "Due to collaboration with Intel on the 64-bit instruction set architecture, we understand...how to harness IA-64's power and smoothly transition our customers to this new platform."
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August 17, 1999
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Look Out, It's Me!
Athlon, AMDs new super chip, enters the limelight
By Andreas Stiller
Volume 16, 1999
c't Magazine
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Usually Nessi (the monster of Loch Ness) makes the headlines every summer but this time the rebellious Athlon is the talk of the town at least in high-tech circles because he intends to push King Pentium III of its thrown or socket actually. This time AMD prepared the attempted putsch well, gathered the troops and filled the armory with sharp lances. Is this going to rock Intels empire?
AMD is fighting for survival. For quite some time now the only Intel competitor in the x86 camp worth mentioning has been writing red numbers, finally even a loss of 162 million Dollars. There were a few quarters with even and slightly positive balances but these could not compensate for the large accumulated losses of the past years. To stay afloat AMD had to sell the silverware in form of subsidiary
Vantis. Now Athlon is send to the field to fight the 'last battle'.
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Server to open doors for Intel
First 8-way Xeon system from Unisys packs Profusion punch, room to grow
By Henry Baltazar
August 16, 1999
PC Week Labs
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Tests of Unisys Corp.'s Aquanta, the first eight-way server armed with Intel Corp.'s new Profusion chip set and Pentium III Xeon
processors, show that Intel-based systems are ready to muscle into the data center.
But this top performance comes at a significant price because an eight-way server such as the Aquanta
ES5085 will cost almost as much as two four-way servers while delivering lower overall performance.
Considering that the price of the processors makes up most of the total server price, IT managers who want to
have room for growth should buy an eight-way-capable server now and add processors a generation later- after
prices drop.
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The Register Files
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By Peter Sherriff
August 16, 1999
The Register
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Despite Chipzilla's vain attempts to hide the value for money differential between the Celeron and Pentium II ranges highlighted in our original RegMark™ benchmarks - including this week axing the entire PII range - we can exclusively reveal that little Celeron continues to be a thorn in Intel's side as it continues to munch dollars from the chip behemoth's bottom line.
The flagship Pentium III does indeed offer superior performance over Celeron, especially in the MultimediaMark 99 and CPUMark99 benchmarks, but PIII floating point performance is way down on the cheapo chip due to Celeron's on-die L2 cache running at full core speed.
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By Mike Magee
August 16, 1999
The Register
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Intel is attempting to queer the pitch of other PC-133 memory players by introducing its own standard in 10 days time, according to US wire Electronic Buyers' News
Earlier this week, we reported that Intel will introduce a so-called "Vancouver" motherboard next month that will allow system builders to switch between Direct Rambus and PC-133 modules.
According to EBN, Intel wants to get control over the qualification stage of PC-133 parts, which will start to appear in volume from memory manufacturers in Q4. It will announce its plans at the Intel Developer Forum at the end of this month, the magazine says. The Register will, once again, be attending the
IDF.
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By Mike Magee
August 16, 1999
The Register
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Our friends over at the site which clocks many chips to their limit, and then some more, is reporting today that a British firm has posted the price and due date of an Intel 600MHz Pentium III using the long-fabled 133MHz Front Side Bus (FSB).
Kyle at HardOCP is pointing to Dabs Direct, which says the part will ship on the 26th of September next.
An Intel representative said: "This is probably a typo." He said that all Intel had committed to was to produce the part in the second half of this year -- and the company is on schedule so to do.
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By Mike Magee
August 16, 1999
The Register
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Small Japanese corner shop Happy Cat has got its claws on Intel's future plans up until the year 2001, with details of its major introduction in Celeron, Coppermine, Cascades,
PIII, Timna and Xeon technology.
The document, which you can view here, also outlines the future sockets Intel will adopt over the next two years.
According to the document, Willamette will use a 423 socket design.
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By Mike Magee
August 14, 1999
The Register
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As reported here earlier, the Pentium III/450 is being phased out and stocks are already drying up. That fact is now confirmed by Intel, in one of its regular missives to its distributors and dealers.
But the Pentium III/450 will not feel lonely when it reaches the wastes of the virtual Intel Siberia. Cold, perhaps, but not lonely.
Five other parts will join it in the lonely trek across the steppes, although the Intel document sent to its channel says that the parts have "limited availability".
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By Mike Magee
August 16, 1999
The Register
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Intel is now saying the Pentium II/450MHz part has limited availability and that means the end of the line for the entire PII family.
The chip giant has relentlessly pushed the Pentium III family into its place during the course of this year, and that process will be complete within the next few weeks, according to reliable sources.
Over the weekend, we reported that the Pentium III/450 will have five chip companions when it enters DodoLand shortly.
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August 16, 1999
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By Anthony Cataldo
August 12, 1999
EE Times
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Advanced Micro Devices Inc. will lean heavily on PC133 and double-data rate synchronous DRAMs to boost the performance of its new Athlon processors, putting Rambus memory on the back-burner due to its high initial cost and the comparable performance of SDRAM-based memory, the company said.
"We've been talking about Rambus a long time, and it was looking like it would be the foremost architecture," said Samuel Rogan, AMD's marketing manager for Japan and Korea. "There will be a time when that will happen, but probably not until the end of 2000 or 2001."
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By Jack Robertson
August 12, 1999
Electronic Buyers' News
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Intel Corp.'s pending endorsement of 133-MHz SDRAM is likely to include a new set of interface specifications that will create a rival standard to the PC133 chips now coming onto the market, according to a variety of industry sources.
The new specifications, which Intel would not confirm, could include tighter timing parameters similar to the extensive engineering effort the company spearheaded prior to the introduction of PC100 SDRAM.
DRAM makers, PC OEMs, and analysts believe Intel will tweak the 133-MHz specs to gain control of the new memory chips' qualification process. A revised set of specifications could also give Intel chipsets supporting 133-MHz memory a competitive edge over chipsets from Via Technologies Inc. and other rivals using current PC133 designs, sources said.
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By Mark Hachman
August 12, 1999
Electronic Buyers' News
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National Semiconductor Corp. has acknowledged that layoffs related to the sale of its Cyrix Corp. subsidiary to Via Technologies Inc. will likely delay shipments of Via's newly acquired, next-generation microprocessor lines.
The affected designs include Cyrix's M-III processor, code named Mojave, and a 6x86 derivative known internally as Gobi.
Originally scheduled to ship in the first half of 2000, the Mojave core could be delayed until next fall, according to Ajay
Misra, senior marketing manager for standalone processors at Cyrix's Richardson, Texas, facility. "It's hard to say," he said.
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By Andreas Stiller
Volume 12, 1999
c't Magazine
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It's now complete, Intel's 64-bit architecture IA64. Together with HP, Intel has published specification V1.0, and its first hardware incarnation will be Merced in mid-2000.
What you find in about 800 pages of documentation (IA64 Application Instruction Set Architecture Guide und Developer's Architecture Guide [1]) does sound quite impressive. And it's no surprise, the architecture being all new and offering colossal things: 128 'general purpose' 64-bit and floating point registers each are waiting to be programmed, plus various application specific registers as well as so-called predication and branch registers.
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By Michael Kanellos
August 13, 1999
C/Net
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For years, Intel has resembled a hedgehog in its approach to business, burrowing into the ground it knew well. But can it evolve into the kind of opportunistic predator that survives and succeeds in today's treacherous high-tech landscape?
Intel, the No. 1 chipmaker, is facing dwindling profits in microprocessors. So the Silicon Valley stalwart has latched onto a grand plan to diversify from a tightly knit family of products to delivering a much broader array of hardware and services.
It's a common theme in high technology today. The Internet economy and uprisings like the recent trend toward free PCs have forced many firms to reinvent themselves seemingly overnight.
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By Michael Kanellos
August 13, 1999
C/Net
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Unlike many corporations, Intel does not provide a hierarchical diagram of who reports directly to the chief executive. The secrecy is for competitive purposes, a spokesman said.
Nonetheless, No. 1 chipmaker has partially lowered the veil to better outline its four-pronged business structure, hatched earlier this year.
Under the new plan, the company is organized into four business units: the Intel Architecture Business Group (IAGB), which controls PC processors; the Network Communications Group (NCG), which makes chips for switches, modems, and other telecommunications products; the Communications Products Group (CPG), which makes communications products that can incorporate NCG chips, and the data services group known as the New Business Group (NBG).
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